The Ministry of Defence is investigating the loss of a computer hard drive
that could contain the personal details of 100,000 members of the armed forces,
according to media reports.
The information was being held by EDS, the MoD's main IT contractor, and was
found to be missing as part of an audit the firm was carrying out in response to
recommendations under the
Data
Handling Review.
The MoD insisted that, although the drive was used as part of personnel
systems, its own investigation had not yet determined what was on the drive.
"Contrary to some press reports, it has not yet been established exactly what
information was held on the hard drive," said an MoD spokesperson.
The BBC claims that the drive contains more than 1.5 million pieces of
information, including the details of 600,000 potential recruits with passport
numbers, addresses, dates of birth, driving licence details and telephone
numbers as well as some financial details.
If true, this would make it one of the worst public sector data losses.
Earlier this year an MoD laptop containing personal data on about 600,000
people was stolen, an incident which, along with the loss of 25 million child
benefit records by HM Revenue & Customs, prompted a review of data handling
procedures across the public sector.
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